Evaluation of the Relationship Between Incubation Practices, Entrepreneurial Orientation and Performance of Incubator Centres in Kenya
Abstract
Small businesses are the fundamental drivers of Kenya’s economy. However,
empirical evidence shows that in a highly turbulent business environment, 46.3
percent of small businesses tend to fail in their first year of operation in Kenya. It was
assumed that, with appropriate use of Entrepreneurial Orientation (EO), these
businesses would take off and become successful. Despite EO intervention, the failure
rate of 46.3 percent of small businesses is high, a great concern to the government and
development partners. To reduce this failure rate, the Government of Kenya licensed
and mandated incubators to nurture small business owners. Despite their presence,
small businesses in Kenya still face unique problems of uncertainty, poor innovations
and slow evolution. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship
between incubator practices, entrepreneurial orientation and performance of incubator
centres in Kenya. The study was guided by client selection criteria, incubator funding
and entrepreneurial management as independent variables, EO as the moderator and
performance of incubator centres as dependent variable. The study was anchored on
Resource Based Theory which supports the strategic entrepreneurship concept. The
study used a correlation design because it focused on a causal-effect relationship. The
study population was 51 incubator managers. Secondary data was obtained from
published sources such as institutional reports, manuals and research done by other
scholars. Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) approach was used to analyze the
measurement model and test the hypothesized relationships in this study. Hierarchical
moderated regression model was used to measure the strength of the relationship
between incubation practices, EO and performance of incubator centres in Kenya. The
joint effect model results indicated that client selection criteria had the most
significant relationship with performance of incubator centres (Regression
coefficient=1.441, p-value<0.05=0.001, followed by entrepreneurial management
(Regression coefficient=-0.041, p-value<0.05=0.856). In addition, analysis showed
that entrepreneurial orientation had a moderating effect on incubation practices and
performance, yielding a significant R2 change of 0.075 that is 7.5 percent additional
variance. The study recommends that, the incubator centres should put proper
institutional systems in place to track and categorize graduate incubatees through
proper record keeping of the previous incubatees history, to minimize failure of
incubators, the state department of Industrialization should embark on developing
policies that will assist in incorporation and management of incubators whether public
or private. The department should also develop entrepreneurship skills and capacity
building programmes that match the technical and entrepreneurial skills and mind-set
within the incubation process. Sensitize and re-orient the growing labour force
towards the entrepreneurial development programmes. Partnerships with relevant
stakeholders are established to ensure relevance of our youth in the job market. It is
envisaged that the findings of this study offer positive insights to entrepreneurs,
academicians and financiers contribution to reshaping government policy as far as
optimal management of business incubators is concerned.
CHAPTER ONE